US2324748A - Drill - Google Patents

Drill Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2324748A
US2324748A US406767A US40676741A US2324748A US 2324748 A US2324748 A US 2324748A US 406767 A US406767 A US 406767A US 40676741 A US40676741 A US 40676741A US 2324748 A US2324748 A US 2324748A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
groove
drill
land
lands
spiral
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US406767A
Inventor
Rodney R Welch
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US406767A priority Critical patent/US2324748A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2324748A publication Critical patent/US2324748A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B23MACHINE TOOLS; METAL-WORKING NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • B23BTURNING; BORING
    • B23B51/00Tools for drilling machines
    • B23B51/06Drills with lubricating or cooling equipment

Definitions

  • This invention relates to twist drills in which the body is spirally grooved, with resultant spiral lands between the grooves, and has especial reference to production of such drills of the oil hole type, wherein spiral oil holes or ducts are provided through the solid metal of the lands of the drills so that oil may be fed through such ducts to the point of the drill.
  • the oil holes may be readily drilled in the lands while they are yet straight so that they will eventually follow the spiral form of the lands when the drills are eventually twisted in the process of formation.
  • a further object of the said invention is to provide for the formation of oil holes in the spiral lands of a drill by machining or forming spiral grooves in the outer surfaces of the lands 1 and thereafter filling in or roofing the outer portions of the grooves with weld material in such manner that a completely walled duct will be formed within each land of the drill, which dirll may thereafter be ground or machined to its final form, thus removing excess weld material from the said lands.
  • a further object is to provide means for insuring the maintenance of a clear walled passage through the bed of the groove of the land when the outer part of the groove is filled with weld material.
  • a still further object is to provide for the filling of the outer part of the groove of the land with weld material in a progressive manner along the groove and over-a progressively moving plug of a material which resists adhesion of the weld material thereto, the progression of the plug along the groove being timed to conform to the progression of the welding operation.
  • a still further object of the invention is to provide for the formation of a walled oil duct in the land of the drill by providing, in a groove formed in the said land, a filler defining at least the outer part of the wall of said duct and thereafter covering said filler with weld material; and, more particularly, it is proposed to utilize asthe duct defining means a tube laid in the bed of the spiral groove of the land sealed in the said groove by weld material filling the balance of the outer part of the groove.
  • a still further object of the said invention is to provide for the formation of oil holes in the lands of a spiraldrill by providing grooves in the said lands following the spiral form thereof, laying in the beds of said grooves spiral rods or wires of fusable material capable of temporarilywithstanding the heat of the welding material, afterwards applied as a filling for the balance of the groove, but capable of being melted from the groove after the welding has been completed, as in the eventual heat-treatment of the drill, to leave walled ducts between the beds of the grooves and the weld material.
  • Figure 1 is an elevation of part of a drill shown in process of having oil holes formed in the lands thereof;
  • Figure 2 is a transverse section of the same, the upper part of the figure showing the formation of an oil hole before final removal of excess material from the outer surface of the drill, and the lower part of the figure, showing the'land as finally completed with the oil hole therein;
  • Figure 3 is a longitudinal sectional development of part of the drill taken through the grooved land,-and illustrating the progressive method of forming the oil hole;
  • Figure 4 is a similar view to Figure 2, illustrating a modification of the method of, forming the oil hole.
  • Figure 5 is a similar view to Figure 2, illustrating another modified method of forming an oill hole.
  • the drill generally numbered I0, is shown as being formed with spiral grooves II and I2, resulting in the formation of the spiral lands I 3 and I4.
  • These lands are grooved, as at l5 and Hi, the grooves being preferable of greater depth than width and having semi-circular beds.
  • H is a plug of a diameter substantially conforming to the width of the groove and of a length which will permit of its being moved along the bed of the groove; and this plug is of a material which resists adhesion of weld material thereto, such, for instance, as the material commercially known as brown carbon, I8 is simply a wire or other means by which said plug may be drawn along the groove as required.
  • the plug I! is started at one end of the groove and weld material i9 is applied above the plug, as shown in Figure 3, in a progressive manner as the said plug is moved along the groove, whereby the plug prevents the complete filling of the groove with weld material, so that the said weld material is caused to complete the enclosing of an oil hole in. the land by bridging the groove in separated relation to the bed thereof, as will be readily understood.
  • the weld mate- .ria-l iii becomes welded :to the sides of the groove and thereby becomes to all intents and purposes integral part of the land, it being preferred that an excess of material be allowed t1;- fiow over the edges of the groove :to insure thorough filling of the outer part of the groove in the manner required; and this excess izisterial is afterwards removed in the eventual grinding of the drill to its final correct form.
  • the weld material !9 In applying the weld material !9 to the grooves of the lands, it may :be permitted to completely close the opposite ends of the groove so that the oil .holes formed therein will :be closed-against the ingress of foreign matter until such time as the drill is ground, when, of course, the ends or" the oil holes may be readily opened during such -,op-- eration.
  • I may form the oil holes by-providing the grooves in the lands as already stated, and :insorting in the beds thereof fillers defining at least the outer part of th walls of the ducts, as for instance, shown in Figure 4, wherein tubes 20 defining the entire wall of each duct are laid in the spiral beds of thesaid grooves. These tubes 25; are thereafter :sealed in position :by :the Weld material is.
  • I may lay :in the :bed of each groove a correspondingly spiral wire filler i, such as of copper era fusable :alloy having a melting point capable of temporarily withstanding the heat of the weld material l9 with which the balanceof-thegroove is afterward filled.
  • This wire is capabl however, of being melted from the groove after the welding has been completed, as in the eventual heat treatment or the drill.
  • the required oil hole will remain.
  • the invention is primarily intended :to overcome the difficulties met in forming oil holes in twist drills, it need not be necessarily limited to such drills as the method employed may be quite advantageously used in drills having straight lands, as in core drills or reamers.
  • the groove is referred to for simplicity of language as being formed in the lands of the drill or tool, the term is not intended to be strictly limited to that particular part of the tool as in some cases the lands are quite narrow and it may be preferred to form the oil grooves in the beds of the clearance grooves or recesses between the lands. This latter condition would apply in the case of most reamers.
  • the method of producing an oil hole drill rem a blank having a land of spiral form, which comprises forming a spiral groove in the outer surface of the said land, drawing an abbreviated filler in the form of a plug progressively along the bed of said groove, said filler being of .a ma .terial which resists adhesion .of Weld material .thereto, progressively roofing said groove with weld material over said filler said filler is moved along said groov at substantially the speed of the welding progression, and thereafter grinding off excess material from the .outer surface of said land.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Drilling Tools (AREA)

Description

Jul zo, 194s. R; R. 'WELCH 2,324,748
DRILL Filed Aug. 14, 1941 Patented July 20, 1943 UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE DRILL Rodney R. Welch, Detroit, Mich. Application August 14,1941, Serial No. 406,767
40mins. (owe-10s) This invention relates to twist drills in which the body is spirally grooved, with resultant spiral lands between the grooves, and has especial reference to production of such drills of the oil hole type, wherein spiral oil holes or ducts are provided through the solid metal of the lands of the drills so that oil may be fed through such ducts to the point of the drill.
Where such drills are produced by the well known twisting process, the oil holes may be readily drilled in the lands while they are yet straight so that they will eventually follow the spiral form of the lands when the drills are eventually twisted in the process of formation.
However, in a drill that has already been twisted or in a drill in which the grooves have been machined in a spiral manner out of a solid blank, it is obvious that drilling the lands to provide such oil ducts cannot be readily accomplished; and the principal object of the present invention, is therefore, to provide a method of forming enclosed ducts in the spiral lands to a twist drill in a manner commercially satisfactory and without involving excessive cost.
A further object of the said invention is to provide for the formation of oil holes in the spiral lands of a drill by machining or forming spiral grooves in the outer surfaces of the lands 1 and thereafter filling in or roofing the outer portions of the grooves with weld material in such manner that a completely walled duct will be formed within each land of the drill, which dirll may thereafter be ground or machined to its final form, thus removing excess weld material from the said lands.
A further object is to provide means for insuring the maintenance of a clear walled passage through the bed of the groove of the land when the outer part of the groove is filled with weld material. I I
A still further object is to provide for the filling of the outer part of the groove of the land with weld material in a progressive manner along the groove and over-a progressively moving plug of a material which resists adhesion of the weld material thereto, the progression of the plug along the groove being timed to conform to the progression of the welding operation.
A still further object of the invention is to provide for the formation of a walled oil duct in the land of the drill by providing, in a groove formed in the said land, a filler defining at least the outer part of the wall of said duct and thereafter covering said filler with weld material; and, more particularly, it is proposed to utilize asthe duct defining means a tube laid in the bed of the spiral groove of the land sealed in the said groove by weld material filling the balance of the outer part of the groove.
A still further object of the said invention is to provide for the formation of oil holes in the lands of a spiraldrill by providing grooves in the said lands following the spiral form thereof, laying in the beds of said grooves spiral rods or wires of fusable material capable of temporarilywithstanding the heat of the welding material, afterwards applied as a filling for the balance of the groove, but capable of being melted from the groove after the welding has been completed, as in the eventual heat-treatment of the drill, to leave walled ducts between the beds of the grooves and the weld material.
It is, of course, an object of the invention to provide a drill having oil ducts formed in the lands thereof in any of the manners heretofore referred to.
Still further objects or advantages subsidiary to the aforesaid objects, or resulting from the construction or operation of the invention as it may be carried into effect, will become apparent as the said invention is hereinafter further disclosed.
In further describing the said invention, b
way of example, reference is made to the accompanying drawing, wherein:
Figure 1 is an elevation of part of a drill shown in process of having oil holes formed in the lands thereof;
Figure 2 is a transverse section of the same, the upper part of the figure showing the formation of an oil hole before final removal of excess material from the outer surface of the drill, and the lower part of the figure, showing the'land as finally completed with the oil hole therein;
Figure 3 is a longitudinal sectional development of part of the drill taken through the grooved land,-and illustrating the progressive method of forming the oil hole;
Figure 4 is a similar view to Figure 2, illustrating a modification of the method of, forming the oil hole; and
Figure 5 is a similar view to Figure 2, illustrating another modified method of forming an oill hole.
Similar characters of reference indicate similar parts in the several figures of the drawing.
Referring first to Figures 1, 2, and 3, the drill, generally numbered I0, is shown as being formed with spiral grooves II and I2, resulting in the formation of the spiral lands I 3 and I4. These lands are grooved, as at l5 and Hi, the grooves being preferable of greater depth than width and having semi-circular beds.
H is a plug of a diameter substantially conforming to the width of the groove and of a length which will permit of its being moved along the bed of the groove; and this plug is of a material which resists adhesion of weld material thereto, such, for instance, as the material commercially known as brown carbon, I8 is simply a wire or other means by which said plug may be drawn along the groove as required.
According to the method shown in Figures '1, 2, and 3, the plug I! is started at one end of the groove and weld material i9 is applied above the plug, as shown in Figure 3, in a progressive manner as the said plug is moved along the groove, whereby the plug prevents the complete filling of the groove with weld material, so that the said weld material is caused to complete the enclosing of an oil hole in. the land by bridging the groove in separated relation to the bed thereof, as will be readily understood. The weld mate- .ria-l iii), of course, becomes welded :to the sides of the groove and thereby becomes to all intents and purposes integral part of the land, it being preferred that an excess of material be allowed t1;- fiow over the edges of the groove :to insure thorough filling of the outer part of the groove in the manner required; and this excess izisterial is afterwards removed in the eventual grinding of the drill to its final correct form.
In applying the weld material !9 to the grooves of the lands, it may :be permitted to completely close the opposite ends of the groove so that the oil .holes formed therein will :be closed-against the ingress of foreign matter until such time as the drill is ground, when, of course, the ends or" the oil holes may be readily opened during such -,op-- eration.
While I prefer the method hereinbefore outlined, I may form the oil holes by-providing the grooves in the lands as already stated, and :insorting in the beds thereof fillers defining at least the outer part of th walls of the ducts, as for instance, shown in Figure 4, wherein tubes 20 defining the entire wall of each duct are laid in the spiral beds of thesaid grooves. These tubes 25; are thereafter :sealed in position :by :the Weld material is. As indicated in Figure 5, I may lay :in the :bed of each groove a correspondingly spiral wire filler i, such as of copper era fusable :alloy having a melting point capable of temporarily withstanding the heat of the weld material l9 with which the balanceof-thegroove is afterward filled. This wire is capabl however, of being melted from the groove after the welding has been completed, as in the eventual heat treatment or the drill. Thus, upon such eventual melting of wire H from :the groove the required oil holewill remain.
It is understood that while the invention is primarily intended :to overcome the difficulties met in forming oil holes in twist drills, it need not be necessarily limited to such drills as the method employed may be quite advantageously used in drills having straight lands, as in core drills or reamers. Furthermore, while herein, and in the claims, the groove is referred to for simplicity of language as being formed in the lands of the drill or tool, the term is not intended to be strictly limited to that particular part of the tool as in some cases the lands are quite narrow and it may be preferred to form the oil grooves in the beds of the clearance grooves or recesses between the lands. This latter condition would apply in the case of most reamers.
This invention may be developed within the scope of the following claims without departing from the essential features of the said invention, and it is to be desired that the specification and drawing be read as being merely illustrative of a referred method of carrying out the said invention, and not in a strictly limiting sense.
What I claim is:
1. The method of producing an oil hole in the land of a drill, which comprises forming a groove in the outer surface of the said land, drawing an abbreviated filler in the form of a plug progressively along the .bed of said groove, said filler being of refractory material which resists adhesion of weld material thereto, progressively roofing said groove with weld material over said filler as said filler is moved along said groove, the progression of the welding and the movement of said filler being substantially at equal speed, and thereafter grinding off excess material from outer surface of said land.
2. The method of producing an oil hole in the land of a drill, which comprises forming a groove in the outer surface of the land, drawing a carbon plug along the bed of said groove, pro.-
.gressively roofing said groove with weld material over said plug as'said plug is moved along said groove at a speed substantially that of the Welding progression, and thereafter grinding .off excess material from the outer surface of the land. 3. The method of producing an oil hole drill rem a blank having a land of spiral form, which comprises forming a spiral groove in the outer surface of the said land, drawing an abbreviated filler in the form of a plug progressively along the bed of said groove, said filler being of .a ma .terial which resists adhesion .of Weld material .thereto, progressively roofing said groove with weld material over said filler said filler is moved along said groov at substantially the speed of the welding progression, and thereafter grinding off excess material from the .outer surface of said land.
f1. The method of producing an oil hole drill from .a blank having a land-of spiral form, which comprises forming a spiral groove in the outer surface of the said land, drawing an abbreviated carbon plug along the bed of said groove, pro.-
gressively roofingsaid groove with weld material over plug as said plug is moved along said groove at substantially the speed :of the welding progression, and thereafter grinding off excess .material from the wouter'surface of the :land.
RODNEY R.
US406767A 1941-08-14 1941-08-14 Drill Expired - Lifetime US2324748A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US406767A US2324748A (en) 1941-08-14 1941-08-14 Drill

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US406767A US2324748A (en) 1941-08-14 1941-08-14 Drill

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2324748A true US2324748A (en) 1943-07-20

Family

ID=23609380

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US406767A Expired - Lifetime US2324748A (en) 1941-08-14 1941-08-14 Drill

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2324748A (en)

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2578743A (en) * 1945-07-23 1951-12-18 Rosenthal Allan Method of making decorative articles
US2811875A (en) * 1956-04-11 1957-11-05 Cogsdill Twist Drill Co Twist drill having oil passages therein and method of construction
US2900851A (en) * 1957-08-19 1959-08-25 John J Rutledge Sandblasting nozzle and method of producing it
US4096373A (en) * 1975-07-03 1978-06-20 Linde Aktiengesellschaft Welding device and method
US4866245A (en) * 1988-06-02 1989-09-12 Hughes Tool Co. Method for manufacturing a rotary rock bit with improved weld root geometry
US6540452B1 (en) * 1997-12-22 2003-04-01 Komet Praezisionswerkzeuge Robert Breuning Gmbh Drilling tool for machine tools and method for the production thereof
US20080135305A1 (en) * 2006-12-07 2008-06-12 Baker Hughes Incorporated Displacement members and methods of using such displacement members to form bit bodies of earth-boring rotary drill bits

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2578743A (en) * 1945-07-23 1951-12-18 Rosenthal Allan Method of making decorative articles
US2811875A (en) * 1956-04-11 1957-11-05 Cogsdill Twist Drill Co Twist drill having oil passages therein and method of construction
US2900851A (en) * 1957-08-19 1959-08-25 John J Rutledge Sandblasting nozzle and method of producing it
US4096373A (en) * 1975-07-03 1978-06-20 Linde Aktiengesellschaft Welding device and method
US4866245A (en) * 1988-06-02 1989-09-12 Hughes Tool Co. Method for manufacturing a rotary rock bit with improved weld root geometry
US6540452B1 (en) * 1997-12-22 2003-04-01 Komet Praezisionswerkzeuge Robert Breuning Gmbh Drilling tool for machine tools and method for the production thereof
US20080135305A1 (en) * 2006-12-07 2008-06-12 Baker Hughes Incorporated Displacement members and methods of using such displacement members to form bit bodies of earth-boring rotary drill bits
US8272295B2 (en) * 2006-12-07 2012-09-25 Baker Hughes Incorporated Displacement members and intermediate structures for use in forming at least a portion of bit bodies of earth-boring rotary drill bits

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2422994A (en) Twist drill
US2324748A (en) Drill
DE1677194A1 (en) Process for the production of drills and the like with oil passages
US1409753A (en) Method of making self-lubricating tools
US2405298A (en) Twist drill
US1826323A (en) Combined drill, reamer, and tap
US4674171A (en) Heavy wall drill pipe and method of manufacture of heavy wall drill pipe
US1531824A (en) Method of making electrically-welded pipe couplings
US2318326A (en) Rock drill
DE3929326A1 (en) PIPE CONNECTION
US2093773A (en) Method of making hollow valves
US1644157A (en) Method of making torch tips
US1101729A (en) Compound metallic article.
US1607089A (en) Method of manufacturing spiral drilling bits and the like
US1454452A (en) Oil tool
US2079265A (en) Welding
US2827551A (en) Method of fabricating tubes for heat exchangers
US1655930A (en) Oil-refining still and method of making the same by electric-arc welding
US2254757A (en) Process of making torch tips
US2110618A (en) Method of making taps and dies
US1891620A (en) Pole structure
US2122481A (en) Method of making a tubular product
US2314189A (en) Method of manufacturing metal cutting tools
US412410A (en) Sylvania
US1379994A (en) Method of making drills or the like